this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2025
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If we're using a linear spectrum of left to right, how far left am I? I would consider myself on the left end of politics and was thinking of joining the Green Party in the U.S.

Here are some of the things I believe in:

Homeless people should get free housing. If I were in charge, they would live in shelters or big buildings like hotels.

Rights for all!

We should make countries better for all and not just go along with whatever the politician says, specifically where I live in the United States. Real patriotism is trying to make a better, for example, United States for everyone and not just going along with whatever our President says and defending his corrupt ideas.

Climate change is a real issue that needs to be taken care of.

LGBTQ+ people deserve representation completely and everyone should be free of discrimination.

Immigration is what shapes the United States (I use a lot of American examples because that's where I live, sorry!) and they should not be tortured, deported, discriminated against, anything. It should be a free country and the borders should be less strict.

Weapons should be banned and crime should somehow become a very rare thing to deal with.

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[โ€“] considine@lemmy.ml 9 points 9 hours ago (2 children)

I think what you are showing is that far right parties often incorporate one or two left-wing policies in order to gain popularity. Cherry-picking those and putting them together does not create a realistic profile of right wing opinions.

[โ€“] comfy@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

It's not just that. What you mentioned is a real phenomenon, but not always the case.

One other reason is when right-wing parties don't realize that their policies are contradictory in practice. This is common in syncretic politics, like Classical Fascism, which has strong roots in both Syndicalism and Nationalism. Mussolini's class collaborative corporatism [as in corpus, 'body'] is a policy which sounded progressive on paper but in reality did not prevent the worker exploitation it aimed to lessen.

Another is that even reactionaries can recognize some good ideas, as long as it doesn't contradict their personal values. I personally know conservatives with pro-environmental policies, because they appreciate and care about the ecosystem and our food supply chain. I know another strong conservative who is anti-privatization but consistently votes for a pro-privatization party! Politics is complex, not a team sport where every voter toes a line.

[โ€“] darklamer@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

I think a much simpler explanation is that none of those issues are inherently right-wing or left-wing, which is what I wanted to demonstrate with my examples.

[โ€“] ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 5 hours ago

The thing that makes them right wing is the exclusions they place on their "progressive" policies. It's always the vulnerable